Skip to main content

Can they lose them all?

If Johnny Unitas, Joe Montana, and John Elway got together to mentor a quarterback, and he ended up like Ryan Leaf...

If Ted Williams, Babe Ruth, and Hank Aaron took over as hitting coaches, and their best student couldn’t out-hit Neifi Perez...

If Magic Johnson and Jason Kidd schooled a student in the art of pinpoint passing, but ended up with Kobe Bryant...

...would any of those be any more pathetic than Jackie Slater and Art Shell coaching Chad Slaughter today?

Yes, two of the finest tackles of anyone’s lifetime are the men in charge of motivating and molding the Human False Start. John Madden, a former Raiders coach himself, pointed out late in tonight’s Broncos-Raiders game that Slaughter was actually doing a decent job blocking when he was punctual. I’m pretty sure my man Elvis Dumervil would disagree, but even if it was true, the Raiders still aren’t going to beat anybody anytime soon.

Yes, the Chicago Bears are absolutely explosive and it appears, for the time being, that I grossly underestimated quarterback Rex Grossman. (I want to see him play at least once before I take it all back, though.) But the only perfect season I want to see this year is Oakland’s tour of unmatched ineptitude, now at 0-5 and counting.

Sadly, it could all end next week when Oakland hosts the Arizona Cardinals. In Andrew Walter and Matt Leinart, we’ll get to watch two young quarterbacks whose youth, interestingly enough, is their only asset. But if Oakland can sneak out of McAfee Coliseum (fine virus scanner, by the way, if heart-breakingly slow) with the “L”, they’re well on their way to a defeated season.

Consider the following opponents: home game against the Steelers, at Seattle, another Broncos game, at Kansas City, at San Diego...then it’s December, and the clock is ticking.

That December 3 home game against Houston looks almost as inviting as next week’s Cardinals game. But I’ve watched a lot of terrible Nuggets teams, and if there’s one thing I’ve learned, it’s how much bad teams relish annihilating the truly awful ones.

Maybe you think it can’t be done. A blocked kick here, a broken tackle there-surely the Raiders can upset somebody. Even the stacked Broncos prevailed by only ten points. The Raiders should win at least a couple. I think.

I hope they don’t. A winless season speaks to a certain sense of...humiliation, of desperation, and of knowing when to quit. If C.U. has given up on the quest, there’s no team I’d rather see take their place than the Oakland Raiders.

Comments

Anonymous said…
I like the Raiders chances. No real quarterback, no run game, one offensive threat that doesn't even like the team, and a mediocre defense. This team looks like a pre-Manning Indy
Bro T said…
I have to admit that the Cardinals' collapse against the Bears has actually sparked an interest in the outcome of the games with the Raiders this week.
Anonymous said…
mike i think that you are basically the coolest person that ever lived! :)
Mike said…
Thanks...you!

Yuk it up, Ukko. Actually, I find myself intrigued by Sunday's game. There is no way the Cardinals should lose. Leinart looked quite good Monday, especially considering who he was facing, though the Bears' decision not to bring any pressure and to dare a young, weak-armed quarterback to beat them with short completions was puzzling, to say the least. Then again, it is the Cardinals, so who knows how the Raids'll fare. (By the way do I know you?)

Andrew Walter's an exciting young prospect. His original team would not have spent a first-day pick on him were it not so. By the way, being a Pac-10 quarterback and slipping to the third round...isn't that like going undrafted coming from anywhere else? Were coaches unsure if he could adjust to a passing-centric offense?

As for Randy Moss, I just think it's amazing that someone with NO history of pettiness could become embittered on such a bad team. Chin up, friend!
David said…
i would love for the raiders to lose them all. right now, i currently reside in the annexed raider nation, where the love for the black and silver run deep, and hatred for the cleveland broncos abounds.

it would be truly monumental to hold over raider nation. it really wouldn't matter if they went on to win superbowls the next twenty years in a row...

they'd always have that one season where they didn't win any... it would be so poetic. the leagues most classless team, notorious for it's lack of character. winless.

but i don't think it will happen. somehow, somewhere someone will find a way.

how did dallas avoid this trap? didn't they beat a playoff bound minnesota team?

Popular posts from this blog

National Basketball Association Finals Preview Blowout!

If you're looking for a stereotypical matchup breakdown for the NBA Finals between the Detroit Pistons and San Antonio Spurs, (Game One is tonight, 7 o'clock Mountain, ABC), you've come to the right place! Center: Ben Wallace, Pistons vs. Nazr Mohammed, Spurs Wallace might be the league's top defender, winning his third Defensive Player of the Year award this season and leading the Pistons in both blocks and steals. It's said he's an improved offensive player, but he still scores primarily on tips and wide-open dunks. "Big Ben" is horrific from the foul line, connecting on 42.8% this season. Also, his brother has taken on NBA players and can probably beat up Mohammed's brother. Mohammed has been a good fit for the Spurs since being traded from the Knicks. It appears Isiah Thomas may have finally made his first mistake as general manager in New York, as Mohammed has started every Spurs' playoff game, averaging 8.1 points to go with a solid seven...

Forget Brett Favre (*)

From my 2007 NFL season preview : Favre's not as good as he once was-who is?-but he's not the disgrace people make him out to be...I don't think he "deserves" to go out with another Lombardi or anything, but I hope he gets to leave on a good note. Oops. What a mistake. And I even knew this day was coming. Let me say that Brett Favre deserves to go down in history with whatever records he earns, so long as a giant asterisk is placed by each and every one of them. As you may have heard, Sunday's victory over the New York Giants made Favre the winningest quarterback in NFL history. I don't know what ESPN did on TV, but this record practically went unnoticed in the places I follow sports. But it's of crucial importance to me. Why? "Maybe someday down the road it will mean a lot," a typically humble Favre said after the 149th win of his career, moving past Hall of Famer [and indisputable greatest quarterback of all time] John Elway. Humble...

Did CU ever win the Pac-12?

In 2010, I bet a college buddy of mine (who longtime readers may remember as the only other contributor to Hole Punch Sports) that CU’s football team would not win the Pac-12 in the next 15 years. Guess what? It’s time for me to gloat, because I was right. Why we were doomed Back in the day, a lot of people made the argument that CU should join the Pac-12 because we’d get so much more TV money there. Of course, given college football is the answer to the question, “what if you had a sport where multiple teams were like the Yankees, and you created a whole universe of haves and have-nots?”, then yeah, you want to be aligned with some of the haves. But the question in my mind wasn’t, “will CU be better off with more money?” That’s an obvious yes. The question I asked was, will CU be any more competitive in their own conference if they’re competing against teams who are also getting more money? I couldn’t see why they would be. The mathematical angle Legend has it that Cowboys runn...